We’re excited to introduce you to the always interesting and insightful Brooke Bledsoe. We hope you’ll enjoy our conversation with Brooke below.
Brooke , appreciate you joining us today. Let’s start with the story of your mission. What should we know?
I didn’t write these books because I had it all figured out.
I wrote them because I was trying to find my way out of the dark.
There was a time in my life when I felt like I was disappearing.
I was in an abusive relationship that slowly drained the life out of me—emotionally, mentally, spiritually. I became a version of myself I didn’t recognize: quiet, anxious, constantly questioning my worth. I was walking on eggshells, trying to keep the peace while losing pieces of myself.
I didn’t know where to turn.
I just knew I couldn’t keep living like that.
She Who Remembers was my first act of resistance.
It was me choosing to speak when I had been silenced.
To feel when I had been numb.
To remember who I was before the world—and that relationship—taught me to forget.
It became a sacred space for healing.
For reclaiming my voice.
For honoring the woman I had buried beneath survival.
This book is for the woman who feels invisible.
For the one who’s been told to be small, to be quiet, to be strong when all she wants is to be soft.
It’s for the woman who’s ready to come home to herself.
But remembering is only the beginning.
The Soft Life Path was born from the realization that healing isn’t just about looking back—it’s about choosing how we move forward. It’s about living from softness, not survival. It’s about nervous system healing, boundaries that honor your truth, and a life that feels safe, slow, and sovereign.
I wrote these books for the unseen woman.
The one who’s been through the fire and is still standing.
The one who’s tired of pretending she’s okay.
The one who’s ready to stop surviving and start becoming.
If that’s you, I want you to know:
You are not alone.
You are not too much.
You are not broken.
You are worthy of a life that feels like peace.

Brooke , love having you share your insights with us. Before we ask you more questions, maybe you can take a moment to introduce yourself to our readers who might have missed our earlier conversations?
I’m Brooke Bledsoe author, creator, and guide for women who are ready to come home to themselves.
My journey into this work wasn’t polished or planned. It was born from pain. I found myself in an abusive relationship that left me feeling invisible, disconnected, and unsure of who I was. I didn’t know where to turn. I just knew I couldn’t keep living in survival mode. That experience cracked me open—and in the pieces, I found purpose.
Writing became my lifeline. It was how I processed, how I healed, and eventually, how I began to reach other women who were walking through their own silent battles. That’s how my first workbook, She Who Remembers, came to life. It’s a sacred space for women to reconnect with their worth, their voice, and their truth. It’s not just a book it’s a reclamation.
From there, I created The Soft Life Path, a follow-up workbook that invites women to live from softness, not survival. It’s about nervous system healing, boundaries that protect your peace, and embracing feminine energy in a world that often demands hardness. I wanted to create something that says: it’s okay to be soft. It’s okay to slow down. It’s okay to want a life that feels safe and nourishing.
I create transformative books that blend emotional healing, feminine empowerment, and practical tools for self-discovery. My work is for the woman who feels unseen, unheard, or unworthy
and is ready to rewrite that story.
Through my books, I help women:
– Reconnect with their self-worth and inner voice
– Heal from emotional wounds and toxic conditioning
– Set boundaries that honor their nervous system and energy
– Embrace softness as strength
– Create lives rooted in peace, power, and authenticity
What sets my work apart is the emotional resonance. I don’t write from a pedestal I write from the trenches. Every page is infused.
I’m incredibly proud that I turned some of the most painful chapters of my life into something that now helps other women heal. It would’ve been easy to stay silent, to keep my story tucked away out of fear or shame but I chose to speak.
I’m proud that I didn’t just survive I created something beautiful from the ashes. And I’m proud that I get to walk alongside other women as they do the same.
If you’re reading this and you’ve ever felt like you were too much, not enough, or lost in your own life I see you. My work is for you. You don’t have to hustle for your healing. You don’t have to harden to be strong. You are allowed to be soft, to be sacred, to be whole.
This isn’t just a brand. It’s a movement. A remembering. A return.
And I’m so honored to walk this path with you.

What do you find most rewarding about being a creative?
The most rewarding part of being a creative is knowing that something I created from my own healing can become a lifeline for someone else.
It’s the moment a woman reads my words and says,
“I feel like you wrote this for me.”
It’s the quiet message that says,
“Your book helped me remember who I am.”
That’s the magic of this work.
I get to turn my story into something that holds space for others.
I get to transform pain into purpose—and offer women a mirror to see their own strength, softness, and worth.
There is nothing more fulfilling than creating from the heart and watching that creation ripple out into someone else’s healing. That’s what keeps me writing. That’s what keeps me showing up.

Is there something you think non-creatives will struggle to understand about your journey as a creative? Maybe you can provide some insight – you never know who might benefit from the enlightenment.
One thing I think non-creatives may struggle to understand is that creating isn’t just about making something beautiful it’s about surviving something painful.
For me, writing isn’t just a craft. It’s a form of healing.
It’s how I process grief, trauma, and transformation.
It’s how I make sense of the parts of my story that once felt too heavy to carry.
When I sit down to write, I’m not just stringing words together—I’m revisiting wounds, confronting truths, and choosing to turn my pain into something that can help someone else. That’s not easy. It’s vulnerable. It’s exhausting. And it’s sacred.
But I wouldn’t trade it for anything. Because when a woman tells me my words helped her feel seen, it reminds me why I do this. It reminds me that art is more than expression—it’s connection. It’s healing. It’s legacy.
So if you’re not a creative, but you’re watching someone pour their soul into their work—know that it’s not just a project. It’s a piece of them. And it’s a gift
Contact Info:
- Instagram: Funinthesun111
- Other: https://books2read.com/u/mdMDa5
this link to she who remembers, that is my one book that is at apple and other places it lists it there and the other places
and I have all of them on amazon https://www.amazon.com/author/brookebledsoe


